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  2. Azalai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azalai

    Many Tuareg traders owned the salt pits and date plantations in Kaouar, as well as holding bonded laborers there, and traveled the caravan to administer their property. The Tuareg Taghlamt, numbering 10,000 camels and stretching 25 km at the beginning of the colonial period, is led by the representative of the Amenukal (confederation leader ...

  3. Trans-Saharan trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Saharan_trade

    Traditional caravan routes are largely void of camels, but the shorter Azalai routes from Agadez to Bilma and Timbuktu to Taoudenni are still regularly—if lightly—used. Some members of the Tuareg still use the traditional trade routes, often traveling 2,400 km (1,500 mi) and six months out of every year by camel across the Sahara trading in ...

  4. Caravan (travellers) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caravan_(travellers)

    A caravan (from Persian کاروان kârvân) is a group of people traveling together, often on a trade expedition. [1] Caravans were used mainly in desert areas and throughout the Silk Road , where traveling in groups helped in defense against bandits as well as in improving economies of scale in trade.

  5. Darb El Arba'īn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darb_El_Arba'īn

    Sudanese telegraph stamp depicting camel caravan (1898) Map of Bir Natrun, a stop on the trade route that was known as a valuable source of rock salt (1925) [1]. Darb El Arba'īn (Arabic: درب الاربعين) (also called the Forty Days Road, for the number of days the journey was said to take in antiquity) is the easternmost of the great north–south Trans-Saharan trade routes.

  6. Category:Time, date and calendar templates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Time,_date_and...

    <noinclude>[[Category:Time, date and calendar templates]]</noinclude> to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on the same line as the code's last character. Note: This page is for templates that perform calculations related to time or provide similar functions.

  7. Berber calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berber_calendar

    Some elements of a pre-Islamic, and almost certainly a pre-Roman calendar, emerge from some medieval writings, analyzed by Nico van den Boogert. Some correspondences with the traditional Tuareg calendar suggest that in antiquity there existed, with some degree of diffusion, a Berber time computation, organized on native bases.

  8. Sahrawis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sahrawis

    The modern day Sahrawis are a mixed ethnic group of Arabs, West Africans & diverse Berbers. The people inhabit the westernmost Sahara desert, in the area of modern Mauritania, Morocco, Western Sahara, and parts of Algeria. (Some tribes would also traditionally migrate into northern Mali and Niger, or even further along the Saharan caravan routes.)

  9. Dvārakā–Kamboja route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvārakā–Kamboja_route

    According to Malalasekara, in the entry 'Kamboja' in Dictionary of Pali Proper Names: 'The country was evidently on one of the great caravan routes, and there was a road direct from Dvāraka to Kamboja (Pv.p. 23).' [29] The Pali work called Petavatthu that Malalasekera refers to (as Pv.p. 23) says that caravan wagons loaded with goods went from ...